The reason I put the T4 250v in was because it said on back of unit fuse 4a 250v.
I did take note of the original fuse but thought thats why it blew because it was too low a rating
First, good luck in fixing the problem with your solder station! With a bit of luck, the failed resistor is the root cause of the problem. But, as others have pointed out, it may also be some other component failure in this area of the circuit, which has taken first the fuse and then the resistor down.
Second, please don't forget the general learning lesson from this. If a fuse blows -- especially if that happens spontaneously, after the device had been working correctly for a while -- there is probably an underlying reason. It's OK to try again after replacing the fuse; they sometimes do die at random (but rarely). But DON'T put in a fuse with a much higher current rating! You are bound to experience just what you did: The fuse now stays intact, but can no longer protect the downstream circuit.
For your solder station, the 4A rating apparently refers to the *input* fuse. That fuse seems to be located just below the power jack in the back (behind a little lid which is accessible from the outside). The internal fuse was probably populated with the correct value. It would have been nice of JBC to also print that value in the silkscreen, which I can't spot in the photograph.